3.
“…no, see, I’m not charming. I don’t
believe in wasting valuable time trying to sweet talk some crying-into-her-cosmo
jilted date to take me home with them.” Jordan pulled a mug down from the
overhead rack and put it under the Budweiser tap. “The trick is to find someone
who wants exactly what you want out of the night. No clutter. No awkwardness.”
“My brother the love doctor,” Mike
shook his head and reached for his beer. “Dude, no offense -,”
“Hey,” Tam said beside him at the
bar, “you don’t have to tell him he’s full of it. Just nod and smile and try
not to hurt his little feelings.”
“Thanks,” Jordan said, dead-faced.
“Thanks for making me feel all grown up and validated.”
Jordan snorted. “Chasing’s not fun.
Chasing’s for back of the pack losers who can’t win.”
Tam nodded. “See?” he glanced over
at Mike. “He’s a runner; he knows these things.”
“He’s also a bartender. I think I’ll
get my life advice somewhere else.”
“I might gag on all this flattery,”
Jordan said, and picked up the rag he’d left on the bar. “I’ll check on you
losers in a minute.”
Of all the coed party bars in
midtown – full of drunken barely legal girls sipping bubblegum colored umbrella
drinks – Jordan worked at one of the few dark and depressing, good old
fashioned grown up bars. Double Down was busy even for a Friday; the long,
dark, high-gloss bar that ran the whole length of the main room’s longest wall
was packed shoulder-to-shoulder with middle aged men and couples watching the
game up on the flat screen behind the bar. With the economy in the shitter,
Jordan had moved back in with Mom and Dad (and Jo) and was holding down two
part-time jobs, his degree totally useless. He was one of two bartenders – the
other a thirty-something bottle blonde with a big rack and a knowing smile –
and even if Mike gave his little brother hell about it, Jordan’s flat-faced
cynicism was exactly the sort of personality most patrons expected out of a
bartender in a place like this.
“So, hey,” Mike leaned over on his
stool so he could get closer to Tam, close enough to be heard above the din of
voices and TVs around them. “I went back to Nordstrom today.”
Tam sipped his beer and stared at
the back wall, but Mike thought his eyes might have rolled, the light striking
off their convex profiles. “Why? Were they having a sale on bath salts, Nancy?”
“Uh, no. I went to see Delta.”
“And lived to tell me about it?”
“Dude, get over yourself.”
Tam sighed and turned to face him,
his expression disinterested under the black razor slashes of his hair. “Fine,”
he said robotically. “How’d it go?”
“It - ,”
His phone rang.
“Hold on a sec.”
“Yeah,” Tam’s gaze went back to the
TV, shaking his head like he thought Mike was an idiot.
Whatever. Mike dug his cell out of his pants pocket and read the ID
display; he didn’t recognize the number. “Yeah?” he answered and reached for
the bowl of peanuts he and Tam were sharing.
“Is this Michael?” a female voice
asked and his hand froze. “Michael Walker?”
For one shameful moment, he was as
excited and jittery as a high school girl. “Yes it is,” he levered a healthy
dose of brightness into his voice, regretting his earlier “yeah”.
He knew who it was; the little sigh
on the other end of the line was all too familiar by this point. He envisioned
her red lips pressed together, dark eyes rolling like she couldn’t believe her
own stupidity. “This is…um, this is Delta Brooks.” There was a noise like she’d
swallowed. “From Nordstrom.”
Score! He pumped a fist in the air in silent triumph and Tam was
forced to grin, even if it was reluctant. He kept it cool on the phone, though.
“Hey, dollface.”
“Doll – oh,” she groaned. “You know,
I can’t believe I -,”
Mike’s confidence fell out through
the soles of his feet. “Wait, wait. Shit, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean…” Tam
sniggered into his beer, “are you still there?”
She huffed an aggravated breath
across the receiver. “Yes. I’m still
here, though I don’t know why.”
Mike’s brain spun for a furious
handful of silent seconds, his pulse thumping in his ears. He had a serious
tightrope to walk here, and with victory one step closer, he wasn’t throwing in
the towel yet. “Well…” he said carefully, “you didn’t throw my card away.”
“No.”
“So that’s something.”
“Is it?” she challenged.
“I think so. I was hoping you’d
call.”
There was a long pause, a rustle of
some kind of fabric, another small sigh. This one wasn’t as agitated. More
resigned. Maybe, he imagined, even a little bit sad.
Mike tunneled through his memory and
dredged up a genuine voice. The kind of voice he’d talk to his mother with
because, clearly, there was no charming this Delta girl. “Are you having a nice
night?” he asked, all innocence.
Another pause. “Not really,” she
said, something lacing her voice he hadn’t heard at the store earlier.
“Why not?”
“My dinner didn’t agree with me.”
And for some reason, he didn’t think she was talking about her stomach.
Jordan came back down the bar. “Do
you jerk-offs -,” Mike silenced him with a wave.
“What’s his problem?”
“He’s getting rejected,” Tam
supplied.
Mike plugged up his free ear with a
knuckle. “I’m sorry,” he told Delta.
“Yeah, well…” she trailed off and
took a deep breath, let it out again. She was wrestling with her decision to
call him, he could tell, chastising herself.
He was over the moon, though. “How
‘bout if I make tomorrow night better? You wanna have dinner?” She was silent.
“I mean, unless you’re still seeing someone…”
“I’m…I,” she sighed again, “I can
have dinner.”
Mike grinned and shot his brother
and best friend the bird. They both rolled their eyes. “Tomorrow, then. I’ll
text you the address.”
**
When Mike left, Tam stopped even
pretending to smile. Jordan had watched the guy’s depression deepen and darken
over the past three or so years and it was exasperating. He worked the bar and
took Tam refills and waited, because the question always came, always said in
that same sad-sack, kicked-puppy voice.
Jordan was reaching for a fresh mug
from the overhead rack when Tam’s eyes flashed up to his face.
“How is she?”
Jordan sighed. Jo was probably the
only person alive who didn’t know that, nearly four years later, Tam was still
hung up on her. “If you’d just nut up and call
her, then you’d know how she is.”
Tam made a face and stared down into
his beer, shaking his head.
“She’s got a cold,” Jordan finally
relented. “Keeps the whole house up at night coughing. But she’s fine.” Tam
nodded. “And she handles single life better than you, dude.”
**
She was making a huge mistake.
“You
have reached your destination,” the computerized GPS voice announced as
Delta turned in at the address Mike had sent her. It was a bowling alley. “Let’s meet for dinner,” he’d said, and
she was at a bowling alley. Either he thought this was a cute joke, or this was
his idea of a date. Neither was comforting for someone who was allergic to all
things impulsive and frivolous.
Delta parked her Volvo and then
stared up at the glaringly bright neon sign above the building’s front
entrance. It had been years since she’d been in a pair of bowling shoes; she’d
spent every summer up until she was fifteen with her grandparents – her dad’s
parents – and her grandfather had been in a bowling league. Her parents were
stiff and stern and polished, but her grandparents…she’d been a kid with them.
Not anyone’s collection of expectations, nobody’s princess – just a girl who
went bowling with her grandpa. The old memories, sepia-toned and curling at the
edges, came flooding back to her, bringing with them a nostalgia she didn’t
want to feel when she met Mike Walker inside. She dated the right kind of men
these days, not…whatever he was, and she didn’t want to be full of warm fuzzies
and reminiscing when she was supposed to be scrutinizing his faults.
With one last check of her lipstick
– she’d gone with nude to complement her smoky eye shadow, the effects of which
would be lost in the dark interior of the alley – and took a deep breath. Here
went nothing.
The place was one of those loud
bowling/arcade combos, a staff member stationed at the door to snap a plastic
over-twenty-one bracelet around her wrist. The lighting was poor and the
thumping music competed with the electronic chimes and kids’ shouts over in the
arcade, but despite the chaos, Mike was easy to find. His height and the width
of his shoulders made the other guys sitting at the bar with him look like
children.
As she stared at his back, thinking
about leaving, he turned to survey the room and spotted her. He waved. And she
had to admit his big Captain America smile was cute, if nothing else.
You’ve
lost your mind, she told herself, and walked over
to meet him.
“Hey.” He did not, thankfully, get
up to give her one of those little date hugs strangers gave each other. He slid
a frosted mug in front of her when she climbed onto the empty stool beside him.
“I got you a beer.”
She glanced sideways at him; he was
in jeans and a navy long-sleeved t-shirt. Much more casual than she was.
“It’s a light beer,” he gave her the
up-down look. “Wow, you really dressed up.”
She tugged at the hem of her black
sleeveless dress with an unhappy half-smile. She was in tights and knee-high
boots, her long wool military coat. She’d spent a half hour sorting through
outfits. “If I’d known we were bowling…” she let it hang, his sheepish smile
signaling he knew she was unhappy.
“Honestly, I didn’t think you’d come
if I told you what we were doing.”
Her reply died in her throat; he was
right. “Yeah.”
“It won’t matter,” he slid off his
stool, beer in hand. “Come on. Nobody ever said you couldn’t wear a little black
dress with red clown shoes.”
Even pissed off about her wardrobe, Delta
almost smiled. She didn’t, but she kind of wanted to.
Love that they met at a bowling alley for the first date! What a hoot! Can't wait to read more.
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